PS3 Cracked With Modded Controller

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Pendragon9

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Well, I don't see why people complain about Sony disabling features now. They have a right to protect their system from pirating.

I get the whole "pirace doesn't mean lost sales" schtick, but that only works for so long. You gotta draw the line somewhere.
 

Keava

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Mar 1, 2010
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Thing is, my dear anti-piracy raging people, that there is quite a big group of hackers that will continue doing it, not to play games for free but simply for sports. It's a challenge. Whenever a company releases some new form of security they want to be the first to figure it out and crack it. For them it's much more enjoyable than actually playing games, so no matter what new policies and firmware the companies will come up with, there will always be group of people working day and night to prove their place on the scene.
 

UnravThreads

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Aug 10, 2009
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ae86gamer said:
Well, you can jailbreak the PS3 with a lot now, like an iPhone or TI-84 Plus calculator. I mean, they figured out how to work around the firmware update the day after it came out. So I'm sure people will find an easy and quick way to bypass this problem then share it with everyone else.

Also, wouldn't banning them be kinda pointless? People can just make a new PSN name for free anyways. :/
Wait, what? You can crack the PS3 with a calculator?

Oh dear.
 

Cynical skeptic

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Apr 19, 2010
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General Consensus said:
"OH EM GEE STOP HACKING GUYTH, U GONNA MAKE THONY MAD"
"I, for one, am willing to give up every bit of advertised functionality if it prevents people playing pirated copies for even an instant."
Not sure what I was expecting the general response to be, but I should've known it'd be that.

Like someone else mentioned in passing, the only real way to placate these types of people (constantly referred to as "hackers,") is by giving them just about everything they might be able to get through "hacking." Once you start restricting them into very narrow definitions of activity, they start finding ways to "break out."

Jailbreaking ipods and such didn't come about because people wanted more out of their ipods, it came about because apple specifically and knowingly cripple their products in very annoying and random ways mostly in the name of "idiot proofing." Which, in turn, is calling everyone who owns or is interested in an ipod an idiot (as true as that might be). Sony is taking the same route, but instead calling everyone who owns a PS3, or was interested in previously advertised functionality, a criminal.

As such, all attempts to stop piracy simply increase piracy.

Also, as far as downloading ps3 games, they're notoriously uncompressed. Fact is, most all effective data compression algorithms were developed for the sake of software piracy.

Not to mention, "playing pirated games online" is an extremely recent phenomena. For decades the unspoken rule has been "if you crack it, don't take it online." So, without an active internet connection, how does microsoft/sony remotely brick a console? How do they patch exploits? Sure, if you want to punish the stupid people, go ahead. But that'll just motivate them to hack more.
 

Albino Boo

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BlackWidower said:
I don't remember signing a contract when I bought my laptop computer, or my Magic Bullet, or my Nintendo DS, and I doubt anyone who bought a PS3 will remember signing any contract either.

Modifying something without permission of the owner is illegal? Yeah, that makes sense. Modifying something without permission of the guy who sold it to you is illegal? Yeah...I don't think so.

Also, what about the Xbox Media Centre? Sure it was just a matter of unlocking already existent code, but it was still a mod.

Now, I agree it's wrong, this whole piracy thing, but it's certainly not illegal.

I'm reminded of certain states where the age of consent (for sex) is 18 and there are no closeness in age exemptions. Two 16 year olds have sex, they could be charged with raping each other. Unlikely that would happen, but the fact that they could be is disgusting.
Its in the terms and conditions of sale, just because you haven't read them doesn't mean it doesn't exist. Contracts don't have to be signed to exist either, they can equally be verbal or implied. Every time you buy something from a shop you are entering into an implied contract with the vendor, him to supply fault free goods and you provide a monetary sum. At no point do you sign or agree to anything about the existence of the contract but it is the bases if consumer rights in the Anglo Saxon legal system (i.e about 1/3 of the population of the world). Also most jurisdictions these days have clauses in copyright legislation stating that state removing copy protection, for what ever reason, is a volition of copyright.
 

Carlston

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Apr 8, 2008
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Didn't we see this on Critical Miss?

Sony disabled controller support due to pirates might use them to play cracked games?
 

DTWolfwood

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Oct 20, 2009
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ban and find a quick fix. OR do exactly this [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/comics/critical-miss/8093-Critical-Miss-34] XD
 

Celtic_Kerr

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May 21, 2010
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spectrenihlus said:
Sony just can't win. It's kind of funny.
I don't know, if you have to solder in PIC chips to the controller, that's kind of a win in itself. I mean I've seen system cracked witout opening the lid and looking inside, and now you have to crack the controller open. Honestlythe extent that modders have had to go to is simply hilarious when you think about it.

I think SONY deserves recognition and a nice big "WIN" plaque for that alone. God knows, they may yet find a way around this
 

UberMore

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BlackWidower said:
I don't remember signing a contract when I bought my laptop computer, or my Magic Bullet, or my Nintendo DS, and I doubt anyone who bought a PS3 will remember signing any contract either.

Modifying something without permission of the owner is illegal? Yeah, that makes sense. Modifying something without permission of the guy who sold it to you is illegal? Yeah...I don't think so.

Also, what about the Xbox Media Centre? Sure it was just a matter of unlocking already existent code, but it was still a mod.

Now, I agree it's wrong, this whole piracy thing, but it's certainly not illegal.

I'm reminded of certain states where the age of consent (for sex) is 18 and there are no closeness in age exemptions. Two 16 year olds have sex, they could be charged with raping each other. Unlikely that would happen, but the fact that they could be is disgusting.
The contract is made when purchasing anything. You agree to a user agreement the moment you give money for that product.

This is what I was taught. It might not apply anywhere else outside of the UK.

And I'm not sure why you started going on about rape, but that point is agreeable, it is disgusting. I live in a country where teenage pregnancy runs rampant and people are becoming grandparents at 28. The age of consent in the UK is 16, but few people stick to that as kids think "I'm only a year/2 years/3 years/4 years off, and what does it matter anyway, it's my choice!". But that's for another thread.
 

edgeofblade

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Jan 8, 2009
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"It wouldn't be all that surprising if it adopted a policy similar to that of Microsoft and banned any hacked PS3's it detected from going online."

I play with an XCM converter, and I'm not about to take my chances that it might still work. Therefore, I have no reason to install 3.5... and seeing how I'm not going online anyway, what's stopping me from modding my PS3?

If Sony had taken the plunge on banning modded consoles first, instead of pissing me off and putting me in this position, I wouldn't be contemplating the mod at all.

Way to go, Sony.
 

oranger

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May 27, 2008
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UberMore said:
oranger said:
Well...there's a line between modifying your own property and infringing on copyright....unless you're modding your ps3, then there's no copying being done, sooo....what's the big deal here?
Both groups (sony and the hackers) are within their rights here.
Hackers are really not within their rights. Hacking a PS3 has NOTHING to do with copyright, but it is tampering with a registered and protected product, modifying without the patentee's consent.
It's highly illegal, and if they bother taking it to court, Sony'll win so fast that the hacker'll wish they'd just got a sunday job and saved up £300, instead of the thousands the court fees'll cost.
Silly, that's where the laws of sale come into play. As in, the product was never licensed/rented in the first place, it was sold. So it belongs to me. there are no "protections" for things that you sell, as it no longer belongs to you.
Patent has to do with reproduction and credit for invention (and of course the ridiculous notion of the ownership of ideas...).
 

FBPH

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Nov 10, 2009
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UberMore said:
oranger said:
Well...there's a line between modifying your own property and infringing on copyright....unless you're modding your ps3, then there's no copying being done, sooo....what's the big deal here?
Both groups (sony and the hackers) are within their rights here.
Hackers are really not within their rights. Hacking a PS3 has NOTHING to do with copyright, but it is tampering with a registered and protected product, modifying without the patentee's consent.
It's highly illegal, and if they bother taking it to court, Sony'll win so fast that the hacker'll wish they'd just got a sunday job and saved up £300, instead of the thousands the court fees'll cost.
Its not illegal (in the US), the new DMCA ruling by the Supreme Court gives consumers complete ownership of their electronic purchases. So if they want to mod the crap out of it, its perfectly fine so long as they paid for it. Pirating games however, is highly illegal.

And last time checked, the courts are still up in the air about whether or not the EULAs should be enforced the same as other legal contracts. Different courts always have different rulings.
 

oranger

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May 27, 2008
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UberMore said:
BlackWidower said:
I don't remember signing a contract when I bought my laptop computer, or my Magic Bullet, or my Nintendo DS, and I doubt anyone who bought a PS3 will remember signing any contract either.

Modifying something without permission of the owner is illegal? Yeah, that makes sense. Modifying something without permission of the guy who sold it to you is illegal? Yeah...I don't think so.

Also, what about the Xbox Media Centre? Sure it was just a matter of unlocking already existent code, but it was still a mod.

Now, I agree it's wrong, this whole piracy thing, but it's certainly not illegal.

I'm reminded of certain states where the age of consent (for sex) is 18 and there are no closeness in age exemptions. Two 16 year olds have sex, they could be charged with raping each other. Unlikely that would happen, but the fact that they could be is disgusting.
The contract is made when purchasing anything. You agree to a user agreement the moment you give money for that product.

This is what I was taught. It might not apply anywhere else outside of the UK.

And I'm not sure why you started going on about rape, but that point is agreeable, it is disgusting. I live in a country where teenage pregnancy runs rampant and people are becoming grandparents at 28. The age of consent in the UK is 16, but few people stick to that as kids think "I'm only a year/2 years/3 years/4 years off, and what does it matter anyway, it's my choice!". But that's for another thread.
Well, here in Canada it is -illegal- to bind someone to a contract without prior consent.

"The contract is made when purchasing anything. You agree to a user agreement the moment you give money for that product." This would constitute a binding agreement without consent here.
I also have a hard time believing that the UK does this....but I'm not on the up and up with UK law.
 

oranger

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May 27, 2008
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Celtic_Kerr said:
spectrenihlus said:
Sony just can't win. It's kind of funny.
I don't know, if you have to solder in PIC chips to the controller, that's kind of a win in itself. I mean I've seen system cracked witout opening the lid and looking inside, and now you have to crack the controller open. Honestlythe extent that modders have had to go to is simply hilarious when you think about it.

I think SONY deserves recognition and a nice big "WIN" plaque for that alone. God knows, they may yet find a way around this
Oh "they" have. There are modded firmware updates already available...the modded versions a re a few "levels" behind, but still, its coming along nicely.
But you're right, forcing the modding community to solder stuff is a big deal. Even if it didn't last.
 

Ghengis John

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Dec 16, 2007
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What a brave guy, opening up a controller like that. Doesn't he know how dangerous those things are? I hear from Sony they explode all the time.
 

poiuppx

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Nov 17, 2009
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So... now to even hack a PS3 properly, you need thorough-enough knowledge about the internal workings of the controller to disassemble, alter, and reassemble the unit?

...call me nuts, but I think Sony won. When it's that much trouble to use the hack, only the most fringe of folks will attempt it, and half of them at least will screw it up and just end up with a non-functional controller.
 

Jumplion

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Mar 10, 2008
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BlackWidower said:
Has any court actually supported the legality of EULAs? From what I hear they haven't. Just because you say something is legally binding doesn't mean it is.

Now, as for terms of service. I thought we were talking about hardware. What service? The online service? Well then if they don't sign up for the online service then you have nothing.
I dunno, I heard that the courts do support EULAs, but hell if I know. My main point was just that you still "sign" a contract, it's just that nobody reads the damn things as it does state that you can't tamper with their hardware without permission (for example, changing harddrives is permissible, but modding the PS3 to play N64 games is not, I guess).

Korias said:
I wasn't really trying to stir things up, though on reflection I probably should have put a bit more forethought in my post. I was just being a layman, stating that you do sign stuff when the OP said "I don't recall signing anything!"

I'm not really trying to get into a debate over what is and isn't ethical in modding or whatever, but regardless of all of that I still firmly believe that hackers only make it worse for the legitimate customers. There may be some "legit" hackers out there who do nothing more than change up a controller, but as far as Sony (or any other business for that matter) there isn't really a difference between them.